I'm pretty certain V'klya's comment was a statement, but storytime is always fun.
The Peacekeepers were created out of a rift between the city and the Hammer. Remember Gloif killing Aztalyn, etc? Though to a point the theme was devised and fostered in the knowledge that tribunals were coming and a desire for those involved (myself included, I'll add) to have Taslamar enjoy the privilage of being the first to follow the Ayamao.
But in the case of the Ayamao, the Knights of the Selkwood had long been played as a counterfoil to the Druids, even predating the D'Astae involvement and so were a natural progression. The Peacekeepers, on the other hand, had long been played as an extention to the Hammer, so in that respect the split was fabricated.
In any case, my purpose for mentioning these old arguments was not to dispute them as incorrect, but rather to point out that they arguably still apply. I just don't agree that they necessarily remain valid anymore when stacked up against the size of the playerbase now and the consequences of fragmenting the players into many disparate groups.
V'klya wrote:
the implication it contains that people ought to be abruptly and artificially altering the direction of their RP to fit with the vicissitudes of OOC reality.
Absolutely not. At least not within certain boundaries, in any case.
Because to a point, we do this anyway. There is a certain stereotype forced upon you by your choice of race, class and alignment, and there is an expectation that you will interpret and so play your character within certain parameters accordingly. The subsequent selection of affiliation in terms of religion and cabal is just an extention of this.
But there's nothing abrupt or artificial about it.
And no reason why conflict (Peacekeeper interests in defence vs Hammer interests in aggression, for instance) can't be played out within the umbrella of a given organisation.
To take the Ayamoan example, had Dulrik not created the Knights of the Selkwood when he did and thus split the Druids with the creation of tribunals, it would not have affected the roleplayed tension and split over the D'Astae fundamentalism under Gaal's direction and Camby's more civic interests as King of Sith'a'niel. You would have just coped with it in other ways.
The Druids remain Ayamoan in origin and bias. Under Gaal the tention between them and the elves was an obvious theme to follow. But under future leaders of the Druids there would be no reason why the polarities of that relationship might not reverse.
The OOC realities of the game mechanics are not necessarily a straight-jacket within which to confine your character and roleplay, but rather a structure to be worked with.[/u]